Green, Leafy Spinach May Soon Power More Than Popeye’s
Biceps
Deborah Halber, MIT News Office
For the first time, MIT researchers have incorporated a plant’s
ability to convert sunlight to energy into a solid-state electronic
“spinach sandwich” device that may one day power laptops
and cell phones.
At the heart of the device is a protein complex dubbed Photosystem
I (PSI). Derived from spinach chloroplasts, PSI is 10 to 20 nanometers
wide. Around 100,000 of them would fit on the head of a pin. “They
are the smallest electronic circuits I know of,” said researcher
Marc A. Baldo, assistant professor of electronic engineering and
computer science at MIT.
Baldo and other researchers from MIT, the University of Tennessee
and the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, including electrical and
biomedical engineers, nanotechnology experts and biologists, collaborated
on the world’s first solid-state photosynthetic solar cell.
The work was reported in NanoLetters, a publication of the American
Chemical Society.
“We have crossed the first hurdle of successfully integrating
a photosynthetic protein molecular complex with a solid-state
electronic device,” Baldo said.
Plants’ ability to generate energy has been optimized by
evolution, so a spinach plant is extremely efficient, churning
out a lot of energy relative to its size and weight. But combining
biological and non-biological materials in one device has stymied
researchers in the past. Biological materials need water and salt
to survive—both are deadly for electronics.
From wet to dry
A new twist in the current work is a membrane of peptide surfactants—similar
to the main ingredient in soap—that helped the photosynthetic
complexes self-assemble and stabilize while the circuit was fabricated.
So far, scientists and engineers’ efforts to harness the
photosynthetic properties of green plants have been most successful
with naturally soft organic materials in liquid solutions. But
if organic solar cells are to be practical for commercial devices,
they need to be integrated with solid-state electronics.
The researchers ground up ordinary spinach and purified it with
a centrifuge to isolate a protein deep within the cell.
The resulting dark green pellets that smell like cut grass were
purified still further and coaxed into a water-soluble state.
One of the challenges was to keep the proteins in the same configuration
as they appear naturally in the organism.
Here’s where peptides come in. The 80,000-plus kinds of
proteins in our body, when in fragments called peptides, transform
themselves like tiny LEGOs™ into millions of substances.
Shuguang Zhang, associate director of MIT’s Center for Biomedical
Engineering, discovered that these same peptides can be tweaked
into forming completely new natural materials that perform useful
functions. One of his designer nanomaterials, which acts like
the main ingredient in soaps and detergents, turns out to be ideal
for keeping protein complexes functional on a cold, hard surface.
The spinach-sandwich device has no water. Proteins usually need
water to survive, but using Zhang’s detergent peptide, the
researchers were able to stabilize the protein complexes in a
dry environment for at least three weeks. “Detergent peptide
turned out to be a wonderful material to keep proteins intact
on the surface with electronics,” Zhang said. He speculates
that the detergent material has some water trapped within it,
similar to the way plant seeds hoard oils that maintain the seeds’
integrity in dry conditions.
Building the sandwich
The bottom layer of the molecular electronic device is transparent
glass coated with a conductive material. A thin layer of gold
helps the chemical reaction that assembles the spinach chlorophyll
Photosystem I complexes. The researchers then evaporate a soft
organic semiconductor that prevents electrical shorts and protects
the protein complexes from the layer of metal that completes the
sandwich.
The researchers shone laser light on the device to create optical
excitation, then measured the resulting current. “An important
caveat is that we got very little current out, mostly because
we had just a thin layer of the complexes in our devices,”
Baldo said. “Most of the optical excitation passed straight
through without being absorbed. Of the light that was absorbed,
we estimate that we converted around 12 percent to charge.”
The researchers hope to achieve a power conversion efficiency
of 20 percent or more (which would provide an extremely efficient
power source) by creating multiple layers of PSI or assembling
them on rough surfaces or 3-D surfaces, like skyscrapers that
concentrate a huge amount of surface area within a relatively
small space.
Patrick J. Kiley (S.B. 2003) of MIT also worked on this research,
which is funded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency,
the Air Force Office of Scientific Research, and the National
Science Foundation.
* * *
A version of this article appeared in the September 15, 2004 issue
of MIT Tech Talk (Volume 49, Number 2).